Eki Movement
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The beginning of the ''Eki'' Movement is generally attributed to the events at the Matrikund fair in Chittod. Here, a group of ''adivasis'' agreed to desist from paying taxes to ''jagirdars'' until the Maharana addressed the problems with the ''jagirdari'' system.


Beginnings of the Movement

The immediate inspiration for the movement was
Motilal Tejawat Motilal Tejawat (Hindi: मोतीलाल तेजावत), (1885–1963) was the leader of the Eki Movement that was agitated in the 1920s in the adivasi-dominated border areas of present-day Rajasthan and Gujarat. Early life Motilal T ...
's exposure to the
Bijolia movement The Bijolia movement (Hindi: बिजोलिया आंदोलन) was a peasant movement in the Bijolia ''jagir'' of the former Mewar state (in present-day Rajasthan in India) against excessive land revenue exactions. Originating in the ...
. Pamphlets associated with the Bijolia movement were circulating throughout Mewar around 1920. Tejawat distributed copies of these pamphlets in Jharol ''thikana'', whose ''jagirdar'' was known to oppress ''adivasis'' and followed up by calling a series of meeting in ''adivasi'' villages in the area, leading to formation of a committee that sought to articulate the grievances and demands of the ''adivasi'' peasantry. In May 1921, Tejawat was able to utilize a large gathering of ''adivasi'' peasants at the annual peasant fair Matri Mundiya near Chittor to spread his message and mobilize his followers on the issues of ''
begar Veth (or ''Vethi'' or ''Vetti-chakiri'', from Sanskrit ''visti''), also known as Begar (from Persian), was a system of forced labour practised in the Indian subcontinent, in which members of populace were compelled to perform unpaid work for the ...
'' and unfair taxation. After the fair, a large number of protesting peasants marched to Udaipur to seek an audience with the Maharana who agreed to meet them and conceded some, but not all demands. Three important issues on which the Maharana granted no concession were: the use of forests by ''adivasis'', ''begar'', and the rounding up of ''adivasis'' for the royal ''shikhar'' (hunt).


Support of Reformist Press

The reformist newspaper 'Navin Rajasthan' strongly supported the Eki Movement. The newspaper condemned the violence against the movement in the states of
Idar Idar may refer to: People * Idar Andersen (born 1999), Norwegian road racing cyclist * Idar Kreutzer (born 1962), Norwegian businessperson * Idar Kristiansen (1932–1985), Norwegian poet, novelist, short story writer and non-fiction writer * Idar ...
and
Sirohi Sirohi is a city, located in Sirohi district in southern Rajasthan state in western India. It is the administrative headquarters of Sirohi District and was formerly the capital of the princely state of Sirohi ruled by Deora Chauhan Rajput rul ...
, and
Vijay Singh Pathik Vijay Singh Pathik (born Bhoop Singh; 1882–1954), popularly known as Rashtriya Pathik, was an Indian revolutionary. He was among the first Indian revolutionaries who lit the torch of freedom movement against British rule. Much before Mohand ...
wrote a series of articles highlighting the conditions of the ''adivasis'' that gave rise to the movement. Navin Rajasthan sent Ram Narain Chaudhary to study the situation. The newspapers 'Lokvani' and 'Praja Sevak' also published articles on the conditions of the peasants associated with the Eki Movement.


No support of Indian National Congress

Gandhi did not approve of Tejawat's methods and distanced himself from Tejawat in an article in Young India: I hear that a gentleman by name Motilal Pancholi hailing from Udaipur claims to be my disciple and to preach temperance and what not among the rustics of the Rajputana States. He is reported to be surrounded by an armed crowd of admirers and establishing his kingdom or some other -dom wherever he goes. He claims too, miraculous powers. He or his admirers are reported to have done some destructive work. I wish that people will once and for all understand that I have no disciples.


Violent suppression of movement

On March 7, 1922, several thousand agitators gathered in the village of Palchitaria in
Idar State Idar State, also known as Edar, was a princely state located in present-day Gujarat state of India. During the British era, it was a part of the Mahi Kantha Agency, within the Gujarat Division of Bombay Presidency. History Idar State was a ...
(the village was renamed Dadhvav and now lies in Vijaynagar taluka,
Sabarkantha district Sabarkantha district is one of the 33 districts of Gujarat state of India and is located in the northeastern part of the state. The administrative headquarters of the district are located in Himatnagar. Geography Sabarkantha District is bounded ...
in present-day
Gujarat Gujarat (, ) is a state along the western coast of India. Its coastline of about is the longest in the country, most of which lies on the Kathiawar peninsula. Gujarat is the fifth-largest Indian state by area, covering some ; and the ninth ...
). Troops of the Mewar Bhil Corps under the command of Major H.G. Sutton opened fire on the crowds. While Major Sutton described the engagement as a 'skirmish' in which 22 persons were killed, local oral tradition claims that between 1,000 and 1,500 were killed. Tejawat himself managed to escape the carnage, and the movement continued for another two months. The events at Dadhvav received little coverage in the then-contemporary press, and is often an ignored chapter in later historical accounts. While some claim that this oversight is because "those killed were poor, illiterate tribals", at least one historian attributes the oversight to the fact that "Motilal Tejawat's movement did not conform to Gandhain precepts... nd..publicity about the massacre did not at the moment accord with the overall political agenda of the nationalist leadership." On May 8, 1922, the villages of Bhula and Balohiya were besieged by police who fired shots on the Bhil residents and set fire to houses. According to one journalistic account of the event, 1,800 Bhils were killed and 640 houses were burnt or destroyed.{{Cite book, url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.119627, title=The Political Movements And Awakening In Rajasthan, last=Saxena, first=K.S., publisher=S. Chand and Co. (Pvt.) Ltd., year=1971, location=New Delhi, page
180
}
By the end of May 1922, the movement had "all but collapsed."


References

Social movements in India